Skip to main content

Tinubu, ANCOPSS, others want History reintroduced in schools

Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, former Lagos State Governor

Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, former Lagos State Governor

The disconnect between youths and the society and the attendant moral decadence have prompted Nigerians to call for the reintroduction of History as a subject in schools.

Notable stakeholders in education and political big wigs told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Lagos that restoring History as a core subject in the schools’ curriculum would enhance Nigeria’s national values.

History is the study of past events, particularly in human affairs.

They told NAN that through History, youths would be able to connect with the past and learn from previous pitfalls of their forefathers to build a better society.

The President of the All Nigeria Conference of Principals of Secondary Schools (ANCOPSS), Mrs. Omotunde Lawson, called for the restoration of History in secondary school curriculum to re-establish national values.

Lawson told NAN in Lagos that the removal of the subject in the school curriculum had caused distortion in students’ perception of national values.

“Many things have been lost due to the removal of History from the school curriculum. What exists in schools now is mere storytelling,’’ she said.

Lawson, who is the Principal of FESTAC Senior Grammar School, FESTAC Town, Lagos, said that students were only told what happened in the past, which they were not familiar with during morning assembly.

“What we do now is to tell the students what we think they need to know about past events.

“They cannot trace those events to even know what happened in the past and why we are where we are.

“So, History is a subject that must be reintroduced if we do not want to lose our past; our facts and figures of what happened in the past to focus on what happens next,’’ she said.

According to her, many students have lost the ability to read; they are now lazy to read because they no longer offer History, which requires serious reading.

NAN recalls that last week in Abuja, the National Leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, advocated for the return of History as a subject in the country’s school curriculum.

Speaking at a book launch, entitled “Muhammadu Buhari: The Challenges of Leadership in Nigeria’’, in Abuja, Tinubu, said that any nation that forgets its past had lost a beacon to guide its actions.

Tinubu, who is a former Governor of Lagos State, said the removal of history, as a subject in Nigerian schools was disturbing.

He lamented that the move had cut off the younger generations of Nigerians from learning about the nation’s history and tradition as well as past mistakes.

“If countries, including the U.S., teach their students about their histories, why not Nigeria with its rich history and tradition.

“History helps a people to connect with the past and learn from past pitfalls,’’ Tinubu said.

Also, Mr. Augustine Agali, the Proprietor of the Prevailers Schools, Ijegun, Lagos, said that history was essential to the academic development of every Nigerian child.

He told NAN that history taught students about happenings in the past, the mistakes and how such mistakes were overcome.

“When children are taught about the Ghanaian empire, Mali Empire and Songhai Empire, they will learn a lot.

“It also helps children with the use of language; it helps them know their roots and improve on the future.

“I want history to be a compulsory subject just as Civics because many students do not show interest in the subject,’’ he said.

Agali commended the proposed reintroduction of history as a subject into the primary and junior secondary school curriculum.

He urged the Nigerian Educational Research Development Council (NERDC) to develop the scheme of work as soon as possible for the smooth take off of the subject.

Meanwhile, the Nigeria Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC) have said the reintroduction of History as a subject in the Primary and Junior Secondary curriculum would soon begin.

Dr. Moses Salau, the council’s Director, told NAN in Lagos that History was very important at the primary and junior secondary schools being the foundation levels.

According to him, history is presently been taught at the senior secondary school but there is a gap that needs to be filled; that is at the primary and junior classes.

He said that when finally introduced, history would become a core subject to be offered leaving school examinations.

“The relevance of history to education is enormous because we need to know where we are coming from, where we are and where we are going.

“When we don’t know our history, where we are coming from, how can we appreciate our present situation?

“History is very important; some components of history were infused into social studies at the primary and junior classes, but you cannot take history as a part of social studies.

“Our children need to know how Nigeria started the amalgamation when we started the regional government, premier and the regions.

“But all these are lost without the teaching of history.

“Each community, state, ethnic group, tradition and culture has its own history; so our children must learn all this from primary school because as they say, charity begins at home and we must start now.

“History is presently being offered at the senior secondary school; there is a gap which needs to be filled from primary to junior secondary school,’’ he said.

The director said there was the need to bridge the gap between the primary and senior secondary schools in the teaching of the subject.

He said that pupils in the primary and junior schools did not have knowledge of Nigerian history, thus there is the need to reintroduce it.

“We don’t have the foundation in the lower class and there is no preliminary information for the primary and junior secondary schools.

“Then they proceed to the senior secondary school and take history for just a few terms.

“We want to run it as one of the core courses in the primary and junior secondary schools.

“It will be a core course and immediately NERDC completes work on the curriculum, we will start implementing it,’’ Salau said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Court grants Fani-Kayode N50m bail

Fani-kayode sandwiched by EFCC officials Justice James Tsoho of the Federal High Court Abuja on Thursday granted a N50m bail to former spokesman of the Goodluck Jonathan Campaign Organisation, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode. Fani-Kayode was arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on a five-count charge of money laundering to the tune of N26m. Fani-Kayode is the sole defendant in the fresh charges numbered, FHC/ABJ/CR/140/2016. The EFCC accused the defendant of diverting 26 million Naira allegedly received from the ONSA while Sambo Dasuki was in office. The anti-graft agency also accused him of handling the said N26 million without going through financial institution as required under the Money Laundering Act. The embattled former minister is already facing 17-count charge of money laundering before the Lagos Division of the court, along with a former Finance Minister; Nenadi Usman, Danjuma Yusuf and a firm; Joint Trust Dimension Nigeria Limited. They were charg...

Pope not involved in Colombian peace deal- Vatican

Pope Francis Pope Francis has turned down a request to play a role in the peace deal between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebel group. The Vatican in a statement issued on Wednesday in in Vatican City said that an invitation was sent to his Holiness in early August to appoint a representative to participate in the committee that selected the judges for the talks. The statement said that though Pope Francis supported the peace process, he, however, reiterated that he would not get involved in Colombian peace deal. It said that Pope was praying for the enlightenment of the hearts and minds of those who were called to promote the common good of the Colombian nation. A deal was announced last week, putting an end to five decades of internal conflict between government forces and the FARC rebels. The agreement, which needed to be ratified through a referendum in Oct. 2, would entail setting up a special court to grant amnesties or pu...

Man docked for defiling 9-year-old girl

magistrate-court A 33-year-old man, Godwin Otobo, was on Monday docked at a Surulere Chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos.For allegedly defiling a nine-year-old girl, ‎Otobo, who lives at No. 10, Borrow Pit St., Sangotedo-Ajah area of Lagos, was said to have defiled the underage girl whose parents also reside in the same compound. The Prosecutor, Sgt. Anthonia Osayande, told the court that the accused committed the offence at about 9.00 p.m. sometimes in September. “The accused defiled the girl in the night when she was fetching water.‎ “The offence contravened Section 137 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011,’’ Osayande told the court. The accused pleaded not guilty to the one-count charge of defilement. Ruling on a bail application filed by the accused, Chief Magistrate Ipaye Nwachukwu, granted him bail in the sum of N500,000 with two sureties in like sum. She said one of the sureties must be a property owner in Lagos State, while the other must be a civil servant on grade...